Current:Home > MarketsShe lost her job after talking with state auditors. She just won $8.7 million in whistleblower case -Wealth Impact Academy
She lost her job after talking with state auditors. She just won $8.7 million in whistleblower case
View
Date:2025-04-18 01:14:22
Tamara Evans found something fishy in the expenses filed by a San Diego contractor for the state’s police certification commission.
Classes were reported as full to her employer, the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training, even if they weren’t. Meeting room space was billed, but no rooms were actually rented. Sometimes, the number of people teaching a course was less than the number of instructors on the invoice.
In 2010, Evans reported her concerns about the contract to auditors with the California Emergency Management Agency.
Then, Evans alleged in a lawsuit, her bosses started treating her poorly. Her previously sterling performance reviews turned negative and she was denied family medical leave. In 2013, she was fired – a move she contends was a wrongful termination in retaliation for whistleblowing.
Last week, a federal court jury agreed with her, awarding her more than $8.7 million to be paid by the state.
The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California, alleged that Evans found governmental wrongdoing and faced retaliation from her employer, and that she wouldn’t have been fired if she hadn’t spoken up.
That’s despite a State Personnel Board decision in 2014 that threw out her whistleblower retaliation claim and determined the credentialing agency had dismissed her appropriately.
Evans’ trial attorney, Lawrance Bohm, said the credentialing agency hasn’t fixed the problems Evans originally identified. The money Evans complained about was federal grant money, but the majority of its resources are state funds.
“The easier way to win (the lawsuit) was to focus on the federal money, but the reality is, according to the information we discovered through the investigation, (the commission) is paying state funds the same way that they were paying illegally the federal funds,” Bohm said. “Why should we be watching California dollars less strictly than federal dollars?”
Bohm said Evans tried to settle the case for $450,000.
“All I know is that systems don’t easily change and this particular system is not showing any signs of changing,” Bohm said, who anticipates billing $2 million in attorney fees on top of the jury award.
“That’s a total $10 million payout by the state when they could have paid like probably 400,000 (dollars) and been out of it.”
Katie Strickland, a spokesperson for the law enforcement credentialing agency, said in an email that the commission is “unaware of any such claims” related to misspending state funds on training, and called Bohm’s allegations “baseless and without merit.”
The commission’s “position on this matter is and has always been that it did not retaliate against Ms. Evans for engaging in protected conduct, and that her termination in March of 2013 was justified and appropriate,” Strickland said. “While (the commission) respects the decision of the jury, it is disappointed in the jury’s verdict in this matter and is considering all appropriate post-trial options.”
Bohm said the training classes amount to paid vacation junkets to desirable locations like San Diego and Napa, where trainees might bring their spouses and make a weekend out of it while spending perhaps an hour or two in a classroom.
“Why is it that there are not a lot of classes happening in Fresno?” Bohm said. “I think you know the answer to that.”
___
This story was originally published by CalMatters and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.
veryGood! (6923)
Related
- Small twin
- NCAA lacrosse tournament bracket, schedule, preview: Notre Dame leads favorites
- Tom Brady Gets Roasted With Jaw-Dropping NSFW Jokes Over Gisele Bündchen’s New Romance
- Key rocket launch set for Monday: What to know about the Boeing Starliner carrying 2 astronauts
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Many Florida women can’t get abortions past 6 weeks. Where else can they go?
- How Meghan Markle and Prince Harry Changed the Royal Parenting Rules for Son Archie
- For farmers, watching and waiting is a spring planting ritual. Climate change is adding to anxiety
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Man dragged by bear following fatal car crash, Massachusetts state police say
Ranking
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Massachusetts detective's affair exposed during investigation into his wife's shooting death
- Millions of people across Oklahoma, southern Kansas at risk of tornadoes and severe thunderstorms
- Rotting bodies and fake ashes spur Colorado lawmakers to pass funeral home regulations
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- Kendrick Lamar fuels Drake feud with new diss track 'Not Like Us': What the rapper is saying
- Kendrick Lamar fuels Drake feud with new diss track 'Not Like Us': What the rapper is saying
- Trump Media fires auditing firm that US regulators have charged with ‘massive fraud’
Recommendation
NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
Turkey halts all trade with Israel as war with Hamas in Gaza claims more civilian lives
Obama weighed in on Kendrick Lamar, Drake rap battle 8 years ago: 'Gotta go with Kendrick'
Princess Beatrice says Sarah Ferguson is 'all clear' after battling two types of cancer
Intellectuals vs. The Internet
Mavericks lock up coach Jason Kidd with long-term extension
Abducted 10-month-old found alive after 2 women killed, girl critically injured in New Mexico park
Kentucky's backside workers care for million-dollar horses on the racing circuit. This clinic takes care of them.